85 N.Y.S. 640 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The evidence of defendant’s adultery is ample to sustain the verdict and decision.
Two exceptions require consideration. One of the issues submitted to the jury was whether the defendant committed adultery with the co-respondent on the 8d day of July, 1901, at Ho. 235 Brook avenue, and another issue was as to whether she committed ad uitery at the same place with the corespondent between the. ninth day of September and the twentieth day of December in the same year; and a third issue'was, whether she had committed a similar act with the co-respondent at a cottage in Patchogue. .There was satisfactory circumstantial evidence of her commission of adultery with the co-respondent at the place mentioned on the 3d day of July, 1901, but this had been condoned. There Was ample evidence tliat she and the co-respondent had been together at the same place between the 9th day of September and the 20th day of. December, 1901, and at
The learned trial justice was evidently of opinion that the rule laid down by the Court of Appeals in Pollock v. Pollock (71 N. Y. 137), to the effect that in an action for divorce depending upon circumstantial evidence where the facts and circumstances are as consistent with innocence as with guilt or are reconcilable with innocence, the plaintiff is not. entitled to recover, has been overruled by Allen v. Allen (101 N. Y. 658). While it would seem from the opinion in Allen v. Allen (supra) that the Court of Appeals did intend to modify the doctrine of Pollock v. Pollock (supra), yet the doctrine announced in the Pollock case has been frequently reaffirmed by the Court of Appeals in divorce cases and in cases involving issues of fraud. (Conger v. Conger, 82 N. Y. 603; Lopez v. Campbell, 163 id. 340.) In Lopez v. Campbell (supra) the Court of Appeals say: “ While a material fact may be established by circumstantial evidence, still, to do so the circumstances must be such as to fairly and reasonably lead to the Conclusion sought to be established, and to fairly and reasonably exclude any other hypothesis. Where the evidence is. capable of an interpretation which makes it equally consistent with the absence as with the presence of a wrongful act, that meaning must be ascribed to it which accords with its absence. In other words, it can only be established by proof of such circumstances as are irreconcilable with any other
At the close of the-charge counsel for defendant drew the attention of the court to a request which he had submitted, but which he did not read in the'presence of the jury, saying, “It is virtually what the Court says in the case of Pollock vs. Pollock.” To this the court replied, “ That has been distinctly overruled by Allen vs. Allen, 101 N. Y. 658, which I just read to the jury — they overruled Pollock vs. Pollock.” Counsel for the defendant thereupon took an excep-r tion. This exception in and of itself presents no error for it does not appear just what the court declined to charge. Subsequently counsel for the d'efendan't-specifically-requested the court “ to direct the jury to answer the issues presented to them in the negative because the facts and circumstances proven by the plaintiff are reconcilable with the theory that the act had not been committed,” and to the refusal of the court to so instruct the jury an exception was taken. No error was presented by this exception for the reason that it was a question for the jury. It could not be affirmed as matter of law that the facts and circumstances proven were reconcilable with the theory of innocence. Counsel for the defendant thereupon requested the court to charge, “ that if from the facts presented there is an inference of innocence as well as of guilt, the jury are bound to answer in the negative.” This the court declined, saying that the jury had already been instructed in the language of the Court of Appeals, and that the burden was clearly upon the plaintiff of showing the commission of the acts by a fair preponderance of credible evidence. Counsel for the defendant duly excepted. The refusal to instruct the jury in the language of this request presents no error. If granted, it would only have confused the minds' of
It follows, therefore, that the judgment should be affirmed.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ. concurred..
Judgment affirmed.